Smithsonian Gardens and U.S. Botanic Garden: Capital Region Garden Bloggers Fling

Smithsonian Gardens and U.S. Botanic Garden: Capital Region Garden Bloggers Fling

July 04, 2017 As we celebrate our nation’s Independence Day today, it seems appropriate to share my pics of the Smithsonian Gardens on the National Mall and the U.S. Botanic Garden, which I toured on the recent Capital Region Garden Bloggers Fling in Washington, D.C. A small posse of garden ...
Life is beautiful at Moroccan-inspired Tanglewild Gardens

Life is beautiful at Moroccan-inspired Tanglewild Gardens

May 25, 2017 As we roll toward summer here in Austin, this gardener begins to fantasize about decamping for cooler climes, like the Pacific Northwest, a gardener’s paradise. So it was surprising and enlightening to hear Skottie O’Mahony and Jeff Breitenstein, longtime Seattle residents who are now cultivating an exotic, ...
Tropical cottage style in Diane and Tom Peace's garden

Tropical cottage style in Diane and Tom Peace’s garden

April 22, 2017 Diane and Tom Peace of Lockhart, 30 miles south of Austin, live and garden in two very different regions: south-central Texas from winter through early spring, and Denver, Colorado, from late spring through fall. Tom, a grower and nurseryman, owns Texas Mountain Flora in Lockhart, operates a ...
Visit to Quinta Mazatlan, birding, and Planta Nativa Festival

Visit to Quinta Mazatlan, birding, and Planta Nativa Festival

October 27, 2016 Texas is a big state, and living in the center of it means that whichever direction you travel, it’s a long drive to the state line. Last weekend, that meant a 5-hour drive to the Rio Grande Valley, where Texas shares a border with Mexico. My destination? ...
Leaves of sunshine and moonlight in Chanticleer's Tennis Court Garden

Leaves of sunshine and moonlight in Chanticleer's Tennis Court Garden

July 11, 2016 The Tennis Court Garden at Philly-area Chanticleer (which I visited in early June with my friend Diana) sits a dozen feet below the main path, so you enjoy an overlook before entering. Back when Chanticleer was a private estate property, this space held a tennis court. Today ...
Hot flower border, meadowy lawn at Chanticleer's House Garden

Hot flower border, meadowy lawn at Chanticleer's House Garden

July 01, 2016 The sun was high when Diana and I exited the Teacup Garden and began to explore Chanticleer‘s House Garden, which unfolds with a view across a tidy croquet lawn. No sign of croquet today — just one cute-as-a-button little girl. The house itself — the summer home ...
Drinking up beauty in Chanticleer's Teacup Garden

Drinking up beauty in Chanticleer's Teacup Garden

June 30, 2016 Eight years ago, on a family road trip through Pennsylvania, I visited Chanticleer on a lark (I was planning to see Longwood Gardens but changed my mind at the last minute), and my understanding of what a garden could be changed forever. Not merely because the garden ...
Those who play in glass houses: Conservatory and Indoor Children's Garden at Longwood Gardens

Those who play in glass houses: Conservatory and Indoor Children's Garden at Longwood Gardens

June 26, 2016 Maybe Southerners don’t need conservatories because our winters are pretty green. Growing up in the South, I don’t recall ever visiting a conservatory until I started garden traveling to northern states. (We don’t have a culture of spring garden shows either, perhaps for the same reason.) Call ...
Palms and dinosaurs at McKee Botanical Garden

Palms and dinosaurs at McKee Botanical Garden

April 06, 2016 Two weeks ago, in mid-March, the family and I drove to Orlando for spring break. Before heading home, we stopped in Vero Beach, Florida, for a day at the shore and to visit McKee Botanical Garden. Yes, those are dinosaurs in the garden. Roar of the Dinosaur, ...
Mischief managed: Wizarding World of Harry Potter and Orlando blooms

Mischief managed: Wizarding World of Harry Potter and Orlando blooms

March 21, 2016 Diagon Alley shops and the escaping Gringotts dragon, which belches fire periodically with a coughing roar and a furnace-blast of heat you can feel in the street below Last week for spring break, we packed up the car, dropped off the dog at Grandma’s, and set off ...
Read This: The Cultivated Wild: Gardens and Landscapes by Raymond Jungles

Read This: The Cultivated Wild: Gardens and Landscapes by Raymond Jungles

January 03, 2016 Were a name and profession ever more perfectly matched than those of Raymond Jungles? Like San Francisco nursery owner Flora Grubb and — I kid you not — Austin urologist and vasectomy practitioner Dr. Richard (Dick) Chopp, Miami-based landscape architect Jungles was surely destined to do what ...
Fall flowery goodness at Zilker Botanical Garden

Fall flowery goodness at Zilker Botanical Garden

November 15, 2015 For your Bloom Day viewing pleasure, how about a return visit to Zilker Botanical Garden? Colorful subtropical perennials surround the parking lot, giving visitors a nice blast of color as they walk in. Here’s ever-popular yellow bells (Tecoma stans), with the purple blooms of fall aster (Symphyotrichum ...
Tropical blooms in the Conlon Garden at GWA Pasadena

Tropical blooms in the Conlon Garden at GWA Pasadena

October 15, 2015 I traveled to Los Angeles last month for the Garden Writers Association Symposium in Pasadena, which included an afternoon of three private garden visits. The first one we saw was Don and Marilyn Conlon’s, a formally designed garden filled with bold tropical blooms, like this hot-pink bougainvillea ...
Playful plant-lover's garden of LA designer Dustin Gimbel

Playful plant-lover’s garden of LA designer Dustin Gimbel

September 28, 2015 Concrete orb shish-kabobs in Dustin’s garden The Death Star was blasting mercilessly when I visited designer Dustin Gimbel’s garden in Long Beach, CA, last week — not at all in the mellow, sunny-L.A. way I’d been led to expect. But perhaps Diana and I are fated to ...
Dreamy green courtyard and water-saving garden in San Antonio

Dreamy green courtyard and water-saving garden in San Antonio

September 15, 2015 My friend Shirley of Rock-Oak-Deer in San Antonio recently uttered the magic words: Come see a few gardens! So last Friday I hopped in my car, drove south to the Alamo City, and met Shirley to tour three gardens. Two of the gardens will be on this ...
Tough August survivors for Foliage Follow-Up

Tough August survivors for Foliage Follow-Up

August 16, 2015 Mexican honeysuckle adds leafy lushness in the dappled shade of live oaks and is flowering to boot. Its companions include Mexican weeping bamboo, Agave colorata, foxtail fern, and Pennisetum purpureum ‘Vertigo’. These are “the bitter days in the garden,” according to West Texan Susan Tomlinson, who blogs ...